▲ 83 r/dji

Lake reveals on a cloudy day, completely unedited.

Took my Avata360 out to a remote lake in the mountains on a pretty cloudy day. Started low between the trees, climbed gradually, and let the lake reveal itself. No post-editing on the flight path. This is purely ungraded, native footage straight from the sensor. For context, light wind and fully overcast. I flew it in Normal mode. Not ideal lighting, but the moody look actually works for this kind of scene.

Pretty happy with how the pacing turned out. The slow climb makes the reveal hit harder than if it had flown straight up from the start. Open to feedback. Would you have flown it differently?

u/NoSquare1942 — 13 days ago

Slumber is the best, most put together sleeping app

I was trying to find their subreddit to write this if they had any but couldn't find it so if you know please link. so I decided to write it here as you might find it useful.

If you're anything like me and your brain decides that 1am is the absolute perfect time to replay every awkward gut-wrecking situation you've ever had, and just rain sounds drive you up the wall, you'll love it as well.

I have a feeling that every single feature is like thoughtfully put together by the whole team or whoever is working on this. On of the example is that you choose the sound you want to listen to after the story ends, so you are not in the abyss out of nowhere if you don't fall asleep.

They have tremendous amounts of stories.
Also gave their meditation clips a shot and it was also great as it's not like classical meditation which in my opinion needs a little knowledge and practice to find them useful. These are super relaxing and I don't feel the pressure to shut my brain off forcefully (which backfires very easily)

This is by far my most used and appreciated tool for sleep and relaxation. So thank you and whoever needs help definitely give it a try, have pretty good free tier as well.

reddit.com
u/NoSquare1942 — 20 days ago

How do you guys come up w your ideas?

I have a good idea enter the Co Create Pitch,bur there's so many lose ends, questions i have no idea how to answer, how do you come up with that? I mean we all have come up with good ideas from the most random places I guess, like a 20 sec tik tok audio, or a random Pinterest quote, or even a meme. But how do you guys do to tie it all together? Is it writing anything that comes to mind and editing it later? Is it being up at 3 pm making up scenarios? Cause i think my brain doesn't wanna work

reddit.com
u/NoSquare1942 — 21 days ago

Why can’t I accept an invitation to chat here in Reddit?

When I click "Accept" in the Chat, it says both "Failed to Accept the Invitation to Chat xxx" and "Failed to Enter the Room"

I tried using the mobile app and the web browser to accept. Is there a reason why this happens? And how can I send a message to that person? Thanks everyone.

reddit.com
u/NoSquare1942 — 22 days ago

Open-source, local-first AI assistants with long-term memory: what I've found so far

Been going down a rabbit hole looking for an open-source AI assistant that actually keeps long-term memory of my work and runs local-first, so figured I'd share what I found in case it helps anyone else comparing options.

The ones worth knowing about:

Khoj - open-source, self-hostable, good at search and chat over your own notes and docs. More a personal knowledge assistant than a task agent.

Onyx (formerly Danswer) - open-source work assistant that connects to your apps and answers questions across them. Heavier to set up, team-oriented.

Reor - local-first AI note app, everything runs on device. Narrow scope (notes) but very private.

OpenLoomi - the one I've been using and building on. Also open-source and local-first, but the angle is a context graph across messaging and email with proactive actions (drafts, reminders) that you approve. Still early at v0.5, and it only knows what you actually connect.

What they share is the local-first, self-hosted AI assistant idea: your data stays on your machine instead of going up to a hosted cloud. The tradeoff is always setup effort vs convenience.

If you've used any of these for real work memory (not just chat), I'd like to hear which one stuck. The long-term memory part is where most of them are still rough imo.

reddit.com
u/NoSquare1942 — 23 days ago

I almost built a whole product line around a factory that wasn’t a factory. Here’s my verification routine now

Confession: I almost committed an entire product line to a supplier whose listing said manufacturer.
Everything looked “right”: factory photos, great English, super responsive, clean answers. In hindsight those are… not green flags. They’re just polish. And polish is cheap.
What saved me was a habit I’d just started forcing on myself: verify before committing. Every time. No exceptions. Trading companies leave fingerprints if you look for them.
My quick reality checks:
Business registration / scope: does it read like manufacturing, or like trading/wholesale/import-export?
Export/shipment footprint: do they consistently ship one category, or is it 50 unrelated categories that scream “middleman”
Photo authenticity: “factory” images that reverse-image back to stock sites / other companies
This supplier failed 2 out of 3. I dodged it.
Now I run the same logic faster and more consistently: I drop the shortlist into accio sourcing expert and ask one very specific thing: factory vs trading company — and show the evidence for the call. The “evidence” part is non-negotiable. A verdict without receipts is worthless. If it can’t find enough proof, I want it to say “insufficient evidence,” not guess.
To be clear: I’m not anti–trading company. Sometimes they’re the smarter choice (consolidation, communication, smaller orders, they can be great). The problem is not knowing what you’re dealing with, because it changes your pricing and negotiation math completely.
My personal red flags lately:
suspiciously wide product range across categories
factory photos that look like a showroom brochure
“we are factory” volunteered multiple times unprompted
registered capital that seems tiny relative to the operation they claim
What are your red flags? And has anyone found out a “factory” was actually a trading company after placing orders? I feel like everyone has a story, but nobody has numbers.

reddit.com
u/NoSquare1942 — 23 days ago

Lake water looked fake today somehow

Single frame from the Avata360, no LUT, nothing. The turquoise near the shore dropping off into that deep blue-green further out doesn't even look real. Hills, town along the shore, cloud stuck on the peak, couple islands sitting in the middle. Lot of color going on in one frame and somehow none of it clashes.

Anyone else shooting over water like this? Curious how the colors hold up at different times of day.

u/NoSquare1942 — 24 days ago

Stop looking for the “best” altcoin exchange. Look for the one that fits your account size.

After you get past the major tier-1 platforms, evaluating smaller altcoin or leverage exchanges by "best vs worst" is a waste of time. They all have completely different personalities based on what you're trying to do.
From what I’ve observed looking into the common "challenger" venues, here is how they actually stack up for smaller accounts:
- The Fee Trap (MEXC): If you only care about 0% headline fees, this is where people go. It’s a listing machine for micro-caps, but you have to watch out for spread and liquidity on highly volatile pairs.
- The Social Hub (Bitget): Their core strength is clearly built around copy trading and their derivatives ecosystem. If you want to follow other traders, it makes sense.
- The Established All-Rounder (KuCoin): Massive coin list and decent liquidity, though you always have to double-check their current availability in your specific region.
- The Small Account Testing Ground (BYDFi): This one is smaller on volume compared to the others, but it’s interesting for newer traders running tiny balances. They have over 1,000 spot tokens and high leverage options (up to 200x), which makes it a decent sandbox to test strategies or burn through a demo account before risking real size.
My takeaway: Don't pick a platform because a YouTuber told you to. If you want the lowest fees, look at MEXC; if you want social trading, Bitget; if you have a small account and just want a straightforward UI to test leverage on random alts, a smaller venue like BYDFi fits.
Just test withdrawals with a small amount first, and never use any exchange as long-term storage.

reddit.com
u/NoSquare1942 — 24 days ago

Need 7 people I have a work

***********************Overrrr ******************* Dm me fast I have a work related to whatapp only for 7 people. Karma should be more than 70

reddit.com
u/NoSquare1942 — 25 days ago

what's a company/product/app you can't believe became successful?

I have been brainstorming for cocreate pitch recently and one thing i've noticed is that some of the companies i find most interesting have incredibly simple ideas.

My friends and i recently started using setlog (not an ad i promise).

My friend group has been spread all over the world this semester. we have different schedules, different time zones, and sometimes you don't realise how long it's been since you've properly caught up with someone u ca relate guys real life problem

It's surprisingly nice being able to get a glimpse of what everyone's up to, even if they're just sitting in the office, commuting home, or grabbing lunch. nothing exciting, just everyday life. The app itself is pretty simple. it compiles short videos taken throughout the day into a grid so you can see snapshots of what your friends were doing.

I think that's what surprised me. the idea sounds incredibly simple, but it solves a problem i didn't really notice until i started using it.

what's a company, product, or app that had a really simple idea but ended up being way more useful than you expected?

reddit.com
u/NoSquare1942 — 25 days ago

I primarily use 3D scanners for reverse engineering car parts, and I'm trying to better understand the positioning of Revopoint's product lineup.

One thing that stood out to me when choosing scanners was how frequently Revopoint releases new products. It seemed like there was a new launch every few months, which made it a bit difficult to understand how each model fits into the lineup. In the end, I chose the Ultra influenced by its advertised performance.
Not long after purchasing it, I started seeing posts and videos from POP4 beta testers. Naturally, that got me curious about how the two products compare.
Looking at the published specifications, the advertised accuracy and some key features seem quite similar. POP4 also appears to introduce AI-assisted functions that aren't available on the Ultra. Based on what I’ve read, I’m having a hard time seeing the practical differences in scan quality between the two — aside from the price difference.
I’m genuinely curious: what do you think justifies the price gap between high-end and lower-cost scanners? Does anyone who has used both have insights on how they differ in real-world applications? I’d really appreciate any advice or experiences you can share.

reddit.com
u/NoSquare1942 — 25 days ago

Luxury / design-focused towel warmer brands: which ones would you compare?

I’ve been looking into towel warmers for higher-end bathroom remodels, and I’m trying to separate the brands by use case instead of treating them all as the same thing.

Most lists mix together basic electric towel racks, radiator-style towel warmers, and more design-focused pieces, which makes comparison confusing.

Here’s how I’d currently group them:

  1. P&Bhusri
    More relevant if the towel warmer is supposed to be a visible design feature, not just a utility rack. Their pieces lean more sculptural/art-inspired, so I’d mostly compare them for luxury bathrooms, villas, boutique hotels, or bathrooms where the warmer should look intentional.

  2. Tubes Radiatori
    Seems more relevant for Italian designer radiator concepts. I’d look at them if the heating product needs to feel architectural and integrated into the room.

  3. Vogue UK
    More classic heated towel rail / radiator territory. Probably a better fit if the bathroom style is traditional or transitional.

  4. Runtal / Zehnder
    I’d compare these more for heating performance and radiator-style function. If actual room heat matters more than visual impact, these seem worth looking at.

  5. Amba / WarmlyYours
    More common residential electric options, especially if the goal is something easier to source and install.

The things I’d compare before choosing:
- is the goal warming, drying, room heat, or design?
- hardwired vs plug-in
- towel capacity and bar spacing
- material and finish durability
- timer/control
- whether it fits the bathroom visually
- warranty/support

I’m not sure there is one “best” brand here. It depends a lot on whether the towel warmer is meant to disappear, heat the room, or become part of the design.

Full disclosure: I’m connected with P&Bhusri, so I’m not neutral. I’m trying to map the category rather than claim one brand is right for every bathroom.

For people who have compared these brands, how would you group them?

reddit.com
u/NoSquare1942 — 26 days ago

Would you use a mobile app that checks if a product is actually worth buying?

I’m working on a Chrome/Safari extension, and I’m thinking about whether it should become a mobile app too.

The extension is pretty straightforward: when you’re shopping online, it tries to pull together the stuff I usually check manually:

prices at other stores

cashback

price history

a short product summary

review summary

That works fine on desktop, because you’re already in the browser.

But on mobile I’m not sure what the app should actually be.

I don’t think people want to open a separate app just to browse random deals. There are already a million of those.

The use case I keep coming back to is more like:

“I found this product somewhere. Is it actually a good buy?”

Maybe you found it on TikTok, Amazon, Reddit, Instagram, Google, or in a text from a friend. Maybe you asked these questions before buy it:

is this cheaper somewhere else?

has the price been lower before?

is there cashback?

what do reviews generally say?

any obvious red flags?

The other direction is a watchlist: save products and get notified when the price or cashback improves.

I’m torn between those two:

share a product link and get a quick buying check

save products and wait for better prices

The first one feels more useful in the moment.

The second one feels more like something people might come back to.

If you were using this, which would make more sense?

Also curious if this should even be an app, or if shopping tools like this should just stay as browser extension

reddit.com
u/NoSquare1942 — 26 days ago

Earn ₹500 Cashback with SuperMoney Referral (India)

I have a SuperMoney referral that can get you up to ₹500 cashback after completing the app’s referral requirements and activating SuperCard Pro.

Current offer shown in the app:

₹500 on SuperCard Pro activation

Extra referral rewards available through referral streaks

If you’re planning to join SuperMoney anyway and want the referral benefit, feel free to DM me for the link and details.

India only. Please check the latest terms and eligibility in the app before signing up.

reddit.com
u/NoSquare1942 — 27 days ago